The church, originally dedicated to the Hungarian king St. Ladislaus, dates back to the mid-13th century and has a Romanesque foundation. It is a single-nave church with a semicircular apse, an attached southern tower, and a northern sacristy. The current appearance of the church was influenced by renovations in the 17th century (vaulting of the nave, masonry gallery, reconstruction of the southern tower) and in the 18th century (window openings in the spirit of Baroque and Classicism). The separate standing tower was built around 1800.
The unique fresco decoration of the church dates from the first half of the 14th century and the 15th century.
From a later stage in the church’s development comes a neoclassical altar with a central oil painting of Jesus with angels by Jozef Czauczik, a pulpit with a canopy from the first half of the 19th century, and a rare organ from 1785.
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